Sterman, John D.,"An Integrated Theory of the Economic Long Wave", 1984
The economic crisis of the 1980s has revived interest in the economic long wave or Kondratiev cycle. Since 1975 the System Dynamics National Model has been the vehicle for development of an endogenous, dynamic theory of the economic long wave. The model has now reached the point where an integrated theory of the long wave can be described. The theory incorporates many of he partial theories that have been proposed by others. Simulations of the model are presented to show the wide range of empirical evidence accounted for by the model. In particular, the theory suggests the long wave arises from the interaction of two fundamental facets of modern industrial economies. First, the existence of physical lags in the economy, limited information available to decisionmakers, and bounded rationality in economic decisionmaking creates the potential for inherently oscillatory behavior. Second, a wide range of self-reinforcing processes exist which destabilize the inherently oscillatory tendencies of our economy, leading to the long wave. These processes involve many sectors of the economy including capital investment, labor markets and workforce participation, real interest rates, inflation, debt, savings and consumption, and international trade. The paper discusses the relative strengths of these mechanisms and the amplification of the long wave through their interactions. The linkages of the long wave theory to innovation, technological progress, and political value change are discussed.
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